COMPLETE CAMPUS COVERAGE Vol. 29, No. 14 P.S.C.A, FINANCIAL DRIVE MAY REACH QUOTA BY TONIGHT Solicitors Report Contributions Totalling $l,OOO at Group ( Meeting Wednesday ASSOCIATION WILL ISSUE CARDS FOR MEMBERSHIP Prof. J. Orvis ICellcr To Start • Canvass of Faculty Men On Monday Noon With over $l,OOO reported pledged .'by Wednesday night, Penn State Christian association officials hope to attain -their -goal of $3,500 when* the annual finance campaign closes to night. Although the contributions up to • Wednesday night did not reach a total as high as the amount pledged at this time last year, a final spurt by both solicitors and contributors was ex pected by P. S. €. A. officials. Un less the quota is reached, a serious curtailment of Christian association activities this year will result. To Issue Cards Students who contribute over three dollars will receive national member ,ship cards after November 1 at the association office in Old Main, while • those contributing a dollar or more : will be. issued local membership cards at that time. The quota set for the student drive is only twenty-three percent of the total budget this year, seventy-seven percent being secured from other sources. : “If a student can contribute and 'doesn’t, he is practically saying that he thinks the association, and air it stands for, should be abolished,” ; Frank'L. Weaver ’33, chairman of-the drive, -said;'. “As a purely, student* or ganizatibh, vit : should" receive’: ..tjhejr.. Co-cd Drive To End approached every woman and faculty member, approxi • mately forty co-ed solicitors under the direction of five division leaders will complete their, part in the finance ! campaign tonight. Women students .arc pledged to collect $520, Ruth M. iHarmon ’34, director of the co-ed can vass, has announced. ‘ Claire.. M. Lichty ’35 .is directing all soliciting of the women'of the fac ulty. Louise A. Halbach ’35 heads the campus dormitories' drive while, town dormitories are covered by a group led by Mary. Scott '35. Dotterer '34 is responsible for solic iting among the town co-ed students, and Mary.M. Westrick ’33, in the wo men’s fraternity houses,. ' . Prof. J. Orvis Keller, of the engin eering extension department . and chairman of the finance committee of the Christian association’s board of "directors, will conduct, the drive for $9OO among faculty, members. . This canvass will open at a luncheon Mon •day for the twenty-one faculty men who will solicit'contributions. CHAPELGOERS TO HEAR VAN ETTEN Pittsburgh Calvary Church Pastor Will Deliver Talk Sunday in Schwab Auditorium Speaking on “What Is A Gentle man?”, Dr. Edward. J., Van Etten, pastor oi the Rector Calvary Church, Pittsburgh, will address the regular chapel services in Schwab auditorium .at 11 o’clock Sunday-morning. Dr.. Van Etten was graduated from Amherst College in 1905, and has. since received "advanced degrees from "the; General Theological Seminary, the Episcopal Theological School, and the University of Pittsburgh. •'The chapel speaker is prominent as one of* the first theologians to take advantage of'the radio as a means of interesting the public in church ser vices. Dr. Van Etten first broadcast in January, 1921. • Dr. Van Etten has ,also been con nected with the Trinity Church, Bos , ton, and the Christ Church in New York, He • has. been honored with .-membership in' the Holland Society and Phi Beta Kappa.« PROFESSOR. WRITES ARTICLE . A paper by Prof. Leonard A. Dog gett, of the electrical engineering de partment, entitled “The Capacitor In duction Motor” appeared in the Sep tember quarterly of the American In. stitute "of Electrical Engineers. . ffcnn @ (fnUrgiatt. | Member of Cast 1 JOHN 1 J. VOORHEES ’33 LACK OF FINANCES CURTAILS EXHIBITS Prof. Dickson Announces Fewer Art Displays at College For Coming Year The number of art exhibits shown at the College this year will be string ently curtailed, -Prof. Harold E. Dick son, of the architecture department, announced Wednesday. Lack of fi nances makes the move imperative this year, Professor Dickson revealed. Although twenty-three exhibits were shown bn the third-floor of Main -Engineering building, last year, it will only be possible to bring a few smaller displays here this year. This was made clear by Professor Dickson when he announced the architecture department’s plans for. exhibits. . May Exhibit Watcrcolors -Only one.^exhibit,.’a showing.* of. photographs;'; of-••Persian-lslomic.' ar chite'cturV;' haT r been > ' , bo6kVd up to the present, Professor Dickson said. This collection, which will be shown at the College in'January, is being sent here by the American Federation of Arts, in response to the recent interest shown in Persian art. Departmental and student exhibits, however, will again be shown this year. Annual ; circulating architec tural exhibits such as the Scarab and Intercollegiate 'Schools of’ .Architec ture shows'are'also "scheduled. . If sufficient funds'can be secured, an exhibition of American watercolors will be brought here later in the year. . Although arrangements had been completed by the department of ar chitecture for an exhibit of American paintings, in the first floor lounge of Old Main for Alumni Homecoming week-end, the plan was abandoned because of improper facilities for hanging-it. . SENIORS ARRANGE MEETINGS Headed by Helen A. Hoover ’33, the senior.sponsor committee has prepar ed outlines for the next three meet ings with the freshman women. Colgate Writer Forecasts 5 Touchdowns for Maroon Sports Scribe Expects Red Raiders To Score Sixth Victory of Season By TOM WALSH Sports Editor. Colgate Maroon Fresh from a string of decisive vic tories and with its goal line still un crossed, Colgate will meet Penn State here tomorrow. Kerr’s team has been steadily improving this season, and reached the peak of its football form against New York University in the Yankee Stadium, grinding out a great victory, 14-to-0. Kerr’s team this year is one of the best, if. hot the best in the East. If Colgate opens up against the Nittany Lion, there is no . telling the result. On the other hand, the canny Scot may. have his team play conservative straight football.. Gambling on a medium between these two'possibil ities, we would venture a guess that the Red Raiders of -the Chenango should win their sixth game of the season by five touchdowns. If Kerr can keep his team keyed to the same competitive pitch that he has in the past two weeks, the Red Raiders of the Chenango .may be slat ed for their first undefeated season in seven years. Colgate this year has everything & football team needs. It is not a team boasting individual stars such as the Johnny Orsi’s, Len Maca luso’s, • Les Hart’s and Johnny .Cox’s STATE COLLEGE, PAt, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1932 COMBINED GROUPS SELECT CAST FOR HOUSEPARTY REVUE Thespians, Glee Club, Players To Offer “Panics of 1932” Ate Week-End Show JOHjNSTON ’33, BAER ’34 APPEAR IN SPECIALTIES Singing, Dancing Skits Feature 12-Act Program—Fishburn ; Directs Production . Announcement of the complete cast for the “Panics of 1932,” combined Thespian, Glee club and Players pro duction to be presented in Schwab au ditorium on Saturday night of house party week-end. was- made Wednesday night, by Prof. Hummel Fishburn, of the. department of music, who is in charge of the show. The show will consist of twelve acts, featuring singing and dancing skits and -short dramatic selections, accord ing to Professor Fishburn. In con trast to last year’s production in which each of the three groups gave a definite part of the show, the “Pan ies of 1932” will be staged wtih mem bers of each' group assisting in the different acts, he said. Cast Named M. Dorothy. Johnston ’33 will ap .pear in several, song nuiwbers with a .quartet composed of Earl J. Brubaker '33, Robert G. Boyer ’33, Richard ,C. Schlaack- *33, and Curtis J. Patterson ’34, while H. Grace Baer '34 will pre sent individual dancing numbers on the program. Those who will appear in short skits in the show are ’Edwin S. Maimed ’33, John J. Voorhees ’33, Benjamin L. Wise ’33, Janies B. Gross ’34, Robert Smith ’34, and Wayne R. Varnum;’S4. Others! in the..cast, are M.. Theresa S. 'Edwards ’35,- Roger’; H. Hetzel Paul K. Hirsch ’35, Bertram-Rosen thal, jr. ’35, Perry R. Smith '35,- and Juanita Sorzano '35. Features Thespian Songs Featuring an overture of song hits from the 1932 Thespian show, “We the People,” the regular Thespian or chestra under the direction of Pro fessor.Fishburn will furnish incidental music for the'“Panics.” “•Assisting Professor Fishburn in staging the show are Frank S. Neusi. baum, of the department of English composition, representing the Penn State‘Players, and Director of Music Richard W. Grant, as the representa tive.of. the Glee club. This., year’s show will be given only-one night in stead of two as was the case last fall. TO HOLD FORUM DISCUSSION <‘Hqw a College Girl Can Budget Her Time and Money” will be the topic of a scries of discussions . M WINNIE ANDERSON LIONS WILL PLAY IN ALUMNI GAME Colgate Homecoming Tilt Rated As Most Important Since Brown Contest Penn State’s Nittany Lion eleven will be playing before Colgate’s an | nual Alumni Homecoming crowd when it takes the field tomorrow afternoon at'Hkmiiton, N/Y*. _ The! Maroon, student newspaper at Colgate, • characterizes the game as “the most important homecoming game since that with Brown thirteen years ago.” Several hundred alumni of the Hamilton institution are ex pected to be back for the Homecoming attraction. To Hold Dance A Penn State-Colgate dance will take place at the Colgate Inn tomor row night in honor of Colgate alumni and the visiting team. An alumni pep rally is scheduled to be held tonight on the Colgate campus. The Lions will again be an Alumni Homecoming attraction when they meet Temple at the Owl stadium No vember 12. The Philadelphia school is also planning a numbey of events for the day. Full details of the cele bration are to be announced shortly. HIGHWAY TO OPEN WITHIN 4 WEEKS Will Eliminate S Miles of Mountain Travel Between Borough, Potters Mills Eliminating nearly eight miles of mountain road, the new concrete highway connecting State College with the main road at Potters Mills will be opened in four weeks, Wallace C. Gates, contractor in charge of one; section, has announced. At present, the road is open to traffic from the borough limits to Boalsburg, while concrete has been laid, with the exception of a two mile stretch, from there to Potters Mills. Built at a cost of $306,000, the thir teen mile span will be part of the Lakes-to. Seas highway system. Approximately 800 to 1000 feet of concrete is laid each day and the en tire project will be completed in about two weeks. The newest sections .must be permitted to dry for an additional ‘period of twenty-one days. Construction work on the new macadam highway from Pine Grov* Mills to McAlevys Fort which will merge with the road to Huntingdon is nearly completed. This highway will he a new direct route to Washington, D. C. LININGER ATTENDS MEETING Prof. Fred F. Liningcr, of the ag ricultural economics department, at tended the annual meeting of the National Dairy Council in Detroit last week. He presented a report on the program of research which was os fablished Ijy the council. PRICE FIVE CENTS 5 Players Will Start Initial Fray With Maroon Game COACH NAMES 28 MEN ON NITTAJNY LION SQUAD “Red Raiders” Favored in Third Battle—Collins Missing From First Team K.v GEORGE A. SCOTT *3l Coach “Bob” Iliggins will use at least five players who have never be fore started an intercollegiate foot ball game when the Nittany Lions line up for the opening kickoff against Colgate University at Hamilton, N. Y. in the final of a three-game scries tomorrow afternoon. Earl Park and Bob Flood, tackles, Veto Rich, center, Ken White and Jim Boring, backs, arc the players elevated to the starting team assign ments for tomorrow’s game, while Captain "Spike” Collins, Tommy Har per, Dick Woolbert, Parker Berry, and Stan Zawacki, regulars, will ride the bench, if Higgins holds to plans an nounced Wednesday night. The changed lineup isn’t the result of poor work on the part, of the first stringers, but rather a desire on Hig gins’ part to have the regulars from Injuries that may keep them out of the more important Sewanee and Temple games. There won’t be any excuses after the battle with Colgate. It’s simply the case of one team step ping out of its class to nicety rivul that - has long since passed it in foot ball material and.power.. _ . 28 Make Trip You can name, almost any other college or university team in the East that would be more suitable to Hig gins and the Lion gridders tomorrow. Colgate, unbeaten and unscored upon in five games this year, is picked to* win by five or six touchdowns, and only a miracle will disprove the ex perts’ selections. Tomorrow’s game shouldn’t appear on the schedule—and it isn’t likely that the New York state institution will be included in the 1D33 program. A schedule calling for games with Harvard, Syracuse, Colgate, Sewanee, and Temple in succession is nothing short of suicide for a team of the strength of Higgins’ eleven. Twenty-eight men made the trip to Hamilton by bus this morning. Cap tain Collins, Lohr, Wille, White, Bor ing, Harper, Morrison, ''Field, and Long, backs, Brewster, Slusser, Heist, McKee, Rosenberg, and Grimshaw, ends, Flood, Park, Berry, Woolbert, and Rose, tackles, Bedoski, Kreizman, Hesch, Longenccker, and Woolridgo, guards, and Rich, Zawacki and An derson, centers, composed the Lion squad. Lions Aim at Score Bedoski and Kreizman, guards, Slusser and Brewster, ends, Lohr and Wille, backs, will complete the Nit tany starting lineup announced by Higgins Wednesday night. Of this group, Bedoski and Wille, although both are veterans, also will be start ing their first games of the season tomorrow. Frequent and many substitutions as a further preventative of injuries arc planned by the Lion head coach. All twenty-eight men arc almost certain (Conlniucd on page three) WOLF *34 SELECTED FOR W.S.G.A. SECRETARYSHIP Activities, Guidance. Publications, Social Committees Named S. Rhoberta Wolf '3-1, was elected secretary of the W. S. G. A. House of Representatives at a meeting Mon day. Ruth M. Harmon '3-1 and Edith R. Cottom ’35, were selected to aid the activities chairman, A. Elizabeth Preston ’33, in putting the-W. S. G. A. point system into effect. Erma E. Ehrlor ’34- and Amy V. Thomas ’35, were'elceted chairmen of the pub lications committee. Mae P. Kaplan *34 was named chair man of the committee on voca tional guidance, while Rosamond W. Kaincs '34 was appointed head of the committee for the W. S. G. A. Hal. hnve’en ili.nner and dance.